The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

ACC ends forgettabl­e season with early NCAA Tournament exit

- By STEVE MEGARGEE

Based on its own lofty standards, the Atlantic Coast Conference had a poor regular season.

Its postseason was even worse.

Florida State and Syracuse were the only ACC teams to make it past the first round, and both lost convincing­ly in the regional semifinals. ACC teams finished with a 4-7 NCAA Tournament record, marking the league’s lowest win total and winning percentage in this event since 1979.

This will mark just the fourth time the ACC hasn’t sent a team to a regional final since the NCAA Tournament went to a 48-team format in 1980 (it’s now a 68team event). The only other years the ACC was left out of the Elite Eight were 2003, 2006 and 2014.

“I think every conference goes through those periods,” Florida State coach Leonard Hamilton said Sunday after the Seminoles’ 76-58 loss to

Michigan. “You can’t stay on top forever.”

Hamilton expects the ACC to return to form in short order.

But the league that has won three of the last five national titles – and a total of 11 since 1991 – had to take its lumps this year.

The ACC’S problems started with the uncharacte­ristic struggles of one of its signature programs. Duke went 13-11, withdrew from the ACC Tournament due to a positive COVID-19 test and ended a string of 29 consecutiv­e NCAA Tournament appearance­s.

When the NCAA Tournament brackets came out, the ACC teams with the best seeds were Florida State and Virginia at No. 4 in their respective regions. That marked the first time since seeding began in 1979 that the ACC didn’t have any team seeded higher than fourth.

That represente­d quite a fall for a conference that had three No. 1 seeds for the 2019 NCAA Tournament: Duke, North Carolina and eventual national champion Virginia.

“We weren’t quite as good at the top,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said after the first round of the NCAA Tournament. “Obviously (North) Carolina and Duke weren’t as good as they’ve been. Virginia was good, but they struggled during the middle of the year. We didn’t really have a top-10, top-15, top-16 team, top-20 team, really, at the end of the day. We had a lot of good teams.”

That became apparent during this tournament.

First-round losers from the ACC included Clemson, Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Virginia and Virginia Tech. Virginia fell to No. 13 seed Ohio in one of the first round’s bigger upsets. North Carolina coach Roy Williams watched his personal record in first-round games fall to 29-1 when the Tar Heels got blown out by Wisconsin.

The ACC’S one pleasant NCAA Tournament surprise was Syracuse, which sneaked into the field with a No. 11 seed but knocked off San Diego State and West Virginia before losing 62-46 to Houston.

While the ACC was down this year, the league figures to be strong again quickly.

Hamilton noted how the consistent strength of the league’s traditiona­l powers has made the conference’s other programs get better. Florida State’s a prime example, as the Seminoles have reached the Sweet 16 in the last three tournament­s and might have earned a No. 1 or No. 2 seed last year if the pandemic hadn’t halted the season.

Some of those usual heavyweigh­ts weren’t quite as strong this year, and the entire conference suffered as a result. Hamilton doesn’t expect it to start a trend.

“This year, maybe we do not have someone in the Elite Eight,” Hamilton said. “But I think most people – most rational, reasonable-thinking people – they know this is not going to be the issue moving forward.”

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON ?? Florida State forward Raiquan Gray (1) and guard Sardaar Calhoun (24) walk off the court after a Sweet 16 game against Michigan in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Sunday.
JEFF ROBERSON Florida State forward Raiquan Gray (1) and guard Sardaar Calhoun (24) walk off the court after a Sweet 16 game against Michigan in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Sunday.
 ?? MICHAEL CONROY - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Syracuse forward Alan Griffin (0) and Jesse Edwards (14) watch from the bench against Houston in the second half of a Sweet 16game in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapol­is, Saturday, March 27, 2021. Houston won 62-46.
MICHAEL CONROY - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Syracuse forward Alan Griffin (0) and Jesse Edwards (14) watch from the bench against Houston in the second half of a Sweet 16game in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapol­is, Saturday, March 27, 2021. Houston won 62-46.
 ?? MICHAEL CONROY - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Houston forward Brison Gresham (55) defends Syracuse forward Quincy Guerrier (1) in the second half of a Sweet 16game in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapol­is, Saturday, March 27, 2021.
MICHAEL CONROY - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston forward Brison Gresham (55) defends Syracuse forward Quincy Guerrier (1) in the second half of a Sweet 16game in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapol­is, Saturday, March 27, 2021.

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